The Booth at the End





Last weekend I discovered the web series The Booth at the End. Only five episodes were made, shown exclusively on HuluPlus this summer. As I watched episodes one through four, I wished the series went on forever, but when I heard the final line of episode five, I realized, no, the story ends perfectly right where it stops.

Apparently the show counts as science fiction, but only in the way that Stephen King short stories or certain Twilight Zone episodes count as science fiction. The series is really more of a character study (articles about it call it a psychological thriller). I like that one HuluPlus user (HuluPlus is the only place you can see it-correction: you can see it on regular Hulu.com, but not if you’re in certain countries) called it the most boring show he’d ever seen. I am fascinated by the show, but to appreciate it you do have to be satisfied with a single location and a bunch of two-person conversations. My only complaint about it is that its many shots of pie and sandwiches make me crave diner food.

The central question of the narrative is “How far would you go to get what you want?” People come to a man who sits in the booth on the end, in a small diner. They want something that has proven impossible to achieve in their lives (it often involves the well-being of someone they care about or the attainment of a certain kind of experience). This man provides them their greatest wish in return for a task that he gives them. As they go through the steps of completing the task, their dream starts to come true.

What’s interesting is that not all the tasks are unpleasant. Some are difficult for ethical reasons, but some are just difficult (such as, to befriend someone with agoraphobia and get him to go outside). There also, at first, seems to be no point or greater design to these tasks.Each is simply the price for what you want. It’s painful yet engrossing to watch the characters constantly weigh the challenges of their task against how badly they want their desire. Often the tasks require them to stretch their beliefs about right and wrong and they seem to be asking themselves, “Is this worth it? How about now? How about now?”

The science fiction aspect of the show is the way this mysterious, nameless man can work such magic in people’s lives. That part is never explained, but I don’t think it’s important. The Booth at the End gets its suspense from the slow reshuffling of people’s ethics and the always present question in the viewer’s mind: are they really going to do that? If this is the kind of series we get when an Internet entertainment provider creates original programming with no budget, then let them never have enough for a haircut.

Comments

  1. Unknown says:

    Just finished season 2 …… Wow……… When will season 3 be showing in the uk?

  2. Dave Hildebrandt says:

    Interested and will share with friends. Thank you for creating this.

  3. Christopher Kubasik says:

    Hello again!

    If you're interested, the Season 2 of THE BOOT AT THE END has started on Hulu.

    I hope you're doing great!

  4. cantorman says:

    I wonder how the tasks get into the book. Notice he not only consults it, he writes in it. So it is more than an authority. It is interactive in some interesting way.

  5. cantorman says:

    CKK – Thank for for creating this. The implied questions are important ones. It is the asking that ennobles us, so thanks for presenting the question.

  6. Sandii says:

    Because it's only streamed in the US, cantorman thanks for the tip, my hubby is an IT whiz, i'm sure he'll sort it for me!!!

  7. Julie says:

    Can't wait to check it out!

  8. cantorman says:

    … Sandii should try using a web proxy with an American IP address …

  9. cantorman says:

    I want to be the man in the booth.

  10. Gina D. says:

    Awesome post, Regina! I just love the way you explain the "moral shuffling." Beautifully said!

  11. Regina Rodriguez-Martin says:

    Sandii, that's terrible! Why can't it be seen in Australia?

  12. Sandii says:

    i found it on hulu but due to me being in Australia i can't watch it… am NOT HAPPY! 🙁

  13. Regina Rodriguez-Martin says:

    Sandii, I guess there's more than one way to see it (according to the creator himself). I thought it was just on HuluPlus. I hope you find it!

    Christopher, I'm surprised you found my review in the wave of articles and posts about your show. Thanks for dropping in! I definitely look forward to more writing from you.

  14. DJ Lock says:

    What a great show CK. When are the new ones coming and will you do them like I heard you may? Best, DJ

  15. Christopher Kubasik says:

    Oh, and you don't need Hulu Plus to see it. Regular ol' Hulu will do!

  16. Christopher Kubasik says:

    Thanks so much for the kind words!

    C.K. Kubasik
    (the guy who created and wrote it)

  17. Anonymous says:

    ok you have my attention! hopefully i'll be able to see it!!!

    San
    xx

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